The new LCD Etch A Sketch Freestyle can’t shake off the lies
Remember Etch A Sketch? Remember spending hours honing
your fine motor skills in turning the knobs and dials, trying to perfect
tracing over the lines? Remember never letting anyone into your room
again after your neighbor’s kid accidentally kicked your Etch A Sketch
across the floor and destroyed your masterpiece?
The Etch A Sketch was an exercise in patience,
character-building, and hand-eye coordination. Today’s kids won’t get to
experience any of that with the latest collaboration from Spin Master
(the company that acquired Etch A Sketch in 2016) and BoogieBoard, the Etch A Sketch Freestyle. It’s half the fun of the classic Etch A Sketch, with none of the effort.
Etch A Sketch Freestyle takes the aluminum powder out
entirely and replaces it with a black LCD screen, which kids can then
use a stylus to draw rainbow lines on. So what are the white knobs in
the corners for? They’re stamps that make shapes on the LCD screen. The
only feature that remains the same as the classic toy is the
shake-to-erase functionality. What is the point of anything?
Etch A Sketch Freestyle will be available for $20 in Fall
2017. In the meanwhile, why not try recreate this at home, analog
style? You can make your own DIY Marvin’s Magic Drawing Board by layering oil pastels and scratching off the top black layer. Learn how to make your own scratchboard here!
The article was published on : theverge
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